We’d like to thank Dion for the amazing writeup he gave Bindows at Web 2.0 Journal today. We really appreciate the time he took to learn about the product and speak with Yoram Meriaz, CEO at Bindows. Some of our favorite quotes from the article:

“The detail and complexity of the user experiences that Bindows creates is amazing, all without sacrjficing clarity of the interface.”

“They offer one of the slickest products so far.”

“If you’re looking to do Enterprise Web 2.0, Bindows is tough to beat and here today…”

“I don’t often devote full blog posts to a single product but Bindows is worth it and I’m seriously considering it for my own Ajax software development work.”

And of course, we didn’t mind the following quote, “I do expect Bindows will be acquired soon enough, with my best guess being Google given that Yahoo now has an impressive new AJAX library of its very own.”

Working with the Bindows product has been an exciting trip so far. With the introduction of SVG-support in Firefox 1.5 we were given the opportunity to draw vector graphics in both Internet Explorer (VML) and Firefox (SVG).

Abhinav Pobbati started working on a sort of graphing tool for a customer and I recently got the opportunity to help him further develop the concept. Now, we have an early demonstration of this simple graph tool which renders its graphics using VML in Internet Explorer and SVG in Firefox, all within the Bindows framework.

The demonstration contains several elements which can be dragged around on the screen. The elements are linked using lines which can be right clicked to show a context menu. Everything with a beautiful pastel coloured background!

In Internet Explorer, memory usage has a severe impact on performance. As memory utilisation rise, performance decrease. Also in comparing strings vs comparing variables huge benefits can be found. Here is a simple test that illustrates the behavior: